Estimated glomerular filtration rate, haemodynamics, and mortality in patients with aortic stenosis
Hemodynamics
Aortic Valve Stenosis
Severity of Illness Index
3. Good health
03 medical and health sciences
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
Aortic Valve
Humans
Aged
Glomerular Filtration Rate
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.1111/eci.13965
Publication Date:
2023-02-06T07:09:48Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
AbstractBackgroundIn aortic stenosis (AS), estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) is an important prognostic marker but its haemodynamic determinants are unknown. We investigated the correlation between eGFR and invasive haemodynamics and long‐term mortality in AS patients undergoing aortic valve replacement (AVR).MethodsWe studied 503 patients [median (interquartile range) age 76 (69–81) years] with AS [indexed aortic valve area .42 (.33–.49) cm2/m2] undergoing cardiac catheterization prior to surgical (72%) or transcatheter (28%) AVR. Serum creatinine was measured on the day before cardiac catheterization for eGFR calculation (CKD‐EPI formula).ResultsThe median eGFR was 67 (53–82) mL/min/1.73 m2. There were statistically significant correlations between eGFR and mean right atrial pressure (r = −.13; p = .004), mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP; r = −.25; p < .001), mean pulmonary artery wedge pressure (r = −.19; p < .001), pulmonary vascular resistance (r = −.21; p < .001), stroke volume index (r = .16; p < .001), extent of coronary artery disease, and mean transvalvular gradient but not indexed aortic valve area. In multivariate linear regression, higher age, lower haemoglobin, lower mean transvalvular gradient (i.e. lower flow), lower diastolic blood pressure, and higher mPAP were independent predictors of lower eGFR. After a median post‐AVR follow‐up of 1348 (948–1885) days mortality was more than two‐fold higher in patients in the first eGFR quartile compared to those in the other three quartiles [hazard ratio 2.18 (95% confidence interval 1.21–3.94); p = .01].ConclusionIn patients with AS, low eGFR is a marker of an unfavourable haemodynamic constellation as well as important co‐morbidities. This may in part explain the association between low eGFR and increased post‐AVR mortality.
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